Stellar velocity dispersions and emission line properties of SDSS-III/BOSS galaxies
D. Thomas (ICG Portsmouth), O. Steele (ICG Portsmouth), C. Maraston, (ICG Portsmouth), J. Johansson (MPA), A. Beifiori (MPE), J. Pforr (NOAO), G., Strombaeck (ICG Portsmouth), C. A. Tremonti (Wisconsin-Madison), D. Wake, (Yale), D. Bizyaev (APO), A. Bolton (Utah)

TL;DR
This study analyzes over 490,000 SDSS-III/BOSS galaxy spectra, measuring stellar velocity dispersions and emission line properties, revealing redshift-independent velocity distributions and redshift-dependent emission characteristics, with implications for galaxy classification.
Contribution
First large-scale spectroscopic analysis of BOSS galaxy spectra measuring velocity dispersions and emission lines, revealing their redshift evolution and correlation with galaxy colors.
Findings
Velocity dispersion median ~240 km/s with 30% accuracy
Redshift independence of velocity dispersion distribution between 0.15 and 0.7
Emission line properties vary strongly with redshift and galaxy color
Abstract
We perform a spectroscopic analysis of 492,450 galaxy spectra from the first two years of observations of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-III/Baryonic Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) collaboration. This data set has been released in the ninth SDSS data release, the first public data release of BOSS spectra. We show that the typical signal-to-noise ratio of BOSS spectra is sufficient to measure stellar velocity dispersion and emission line fluxes for individual objects. The typical velocity dispersion of a BOSS galaxy is 240 km/s, with an accuracy of better than 30 per cent for 93 per cent of BOSS galaxies. The distribution in velocity dispersion is redshift independent between redshifts 0.15 and 0.7, which reflects the survey design targeting massive galaxies with an approximately uniform mass distribution in this redshift interval. The majority of BOSS galaxies lack detectable…
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